Born in a Slum, Bobi Wine Rose to Stardom. Now, He’s Taking on Uganda’s Dictator (The Indypendent – March 5)

“We are trying to galvanize this international attention on him and his cause and the People Power movement in general,” said Jeffrey Smith, founder of Vanguard Africa, a Washington-based organization that works to support democratic leaders on the continent.

“When you have a sustained international spotlight on a country,” says Smith, “that really emboldens people to go out and to protest and to speak their minds, and to criticize the government that has lorded over them for over three decades. When they go to queue for hours to vote in 2021, they will know, hopefully, that their votes won’t be in vain.”

Zimbabwe Cries Foul as Trump Extends Targeted Sanctions on ZANU-PF Officials (Voice of America – March 5)

 Jeffrey Smith, the founding director of Vanguard Africa, a United States pro-democracy group, says Harare must simply reform: “The fact that the government ... even attempted to influence U.S. policy in this way, really was an indication of their misplaced priorities. Instead of reforming Mugabe era laws, and instead of abiding by the rule of law, abiding by Zimbabwe’s own constitution, regional and international human rights obligations, they decided to go the route of spending hundreds of thousands dollars on PR and lobbying firms in Washington, DC. This exercise was never going to work.”

Togo’s President Set To Retain Grip on Power (Financial Times – February 22)

“It’s not fair or even accurate to describe the electoral exercise taking place in Togo as an election,” said Jeffrey Smith, founding director of Vanguard Africa, a Washington-based non-profit group that supports free and fair elections in Africa. “It’s a carefully stage-managed coronation — a process by which a family dynasty is seeking legitimacy that it has not earned, nor does it deserve.”

A Strategy on Autopilot: How America Deals with Africa, Despite Donald Trump (The Economist – February 20)

Mr Trump’s lack of interest in Africa may unwittingly have given professional Africanists more scope, argues Jeffrey Smith of Vanguard Africa, a pro-democracy outfit in Washington. The congressional subcommittee for Africa, which has remained firmly bipartisan, has refused for instance to accept the swingeing cuts in spending on State Department or un programmes for Africa that the White House has demanded. 

Mike Pompeo Continues Africa Tour Amid Fears over China’s Influence (The Irish Times – February 17)

Jeffrey Smith, the founding director of Vanguard Africa, a nonprofit organisation that supports pro-reform leaders and democratic development in Africa, told The Irish Times the lack of a long-term Africa strategy coming from the Trump administration has been concerning.

Tanzania Slapped with US Travel Ban, Individual Sanctions Amid Deteriorating Human Rights Situation (Global Voices – February 7)

Jeffrey Smith, with Vanguard Africa, warned Tanzanian human rights activists not to conflate celebration over the individual travel ban with the overall, blanket suspension of all Tanzanian citizens from participating in the diversity visa program, seen to many as racist and xenophobic.

Unpacking Gambia’s Three-Year Pact: Constitution vs. Coalition MOU (Africa News – January 28, 2020)

According to Jeffrey Smith, founding director of pro-democracy outfit Vanguard Africa, The Gambia remains in transition. He told Africanews: “While The Gambia was not mired in social conflict in a traditional sense, nor was it afflicted by civil war, the country of today – three years into a profoundly complicated democratic transition – resembles that of a post-conflict society.

“It is a society collectively grappling, and still coming to terms, with their collective and individual traumas induced by Jammeh’s autocratic rule. In this way, the country very much remains in a tenuous transition.”

Equatorial Guinea’s President Obiang Must Reveal Looted Wealth to Receive IMF Loan (Times of London – December 31)

He is the world’s longest serving president, whose family has been accused of squandering his nation’s oil wealth on jets and sports cars as its people struggle in poverty. Now, as Equatorial Guinea faces ruin after years of mismanagement and alleged corruption,  President Obiang could be forced to come clean on the full extent of his regime’s plundering over 40 years.

Uganda’s Opposition Fights to be Heard Amid Clampdown on Dissent (Deutsche Welle – November 14)

Uganda, under Museveni's rule, has a long history of repression. But the "brazen crackdown on human rights has clearly escalated in recent months," said Jeffrey Smith, the founding director of Vanguard Africa, a nonprofit organization that supports fair elections in Africa. "The abuse of citizens and the targeting of dissent in Uganda is worse at this time because the Museveni regime is paranoid and it's clear that his support is waning"